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Fetal Birth Injuries

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Title: Fetal Birth Injuries


1
Fetal Birth Injuries
  • Dr. Ashraf Fouda
  • Domiatte General Hospital

2
Definition
  • The term birth injury is used to denote
  • avoidable and unavoidable
  • mechanical, hypoxic and ischemic injury
  • affecting the infant
  • during
  • labor and delivery.

3
Definition
  • Birth injuries may result from
  • Inappropriate or deficient medical skill or
    attention.
  • They may occur, despite skilled and competent
    obstetric care.

4
Incidence
  • Has been estimated at 2-7/1,000 live births.
    Predisposing factors
  • Macrosomia,
  • Prematurity,
  • Cephalopelvic disproportion,
  • Dystocia,
  • Prolonged labor, and
  • Breech presentation.

5
Incidence
  • 5-8/100,000 infants die of birth trauma, and
  • 25/100,000 die of anoxic injuries
  • Such injuries represent 2-3 of infant deaths.

6
Cranial Injuries
7
Erythema, abrasions, ecchymoses,
  • Of facial or scalp soft tissues may be seen after
    forceps or vacuum-assisted deliveries.
  • Their location depends on the area of application
    of the forceps.

8
Subconjunctival ,retinal hemorrhages and
petechiae of the skin of the head and neck
  • All are common.
  • All are probably secondary to a sudden increase
    in intrathoracic pressure during passage of the
    chest through the birth canal.
  • Parents should be assured that they are temporary
    and the result of normal hazards of delivery.

9
Molding
  • Molding of the head and overriding of the
    parietal bones are frequently associated with
    caput succedaneum and become more evident after
    the caput has receded but disappear during the
    first weeks of life.
  • Rarely, a hemorrhagic caput may result in shock
    and require blood transfusion.

10
Caput succedaneum
  • Diffuse, sometimes ecchymotic, edematous swelling
    of the soft tissues of the scalp involving the
    portion presenting during vertex delivery.
  • It may extend across the midline and across
    suture lines.
  • The edema disappears within the first few days of
    life.

11
Caput succedaneum
  • Analogous swelling, discoloration, and distortion
    of the face are seen in face presentations.
  • No specific treatment is needed, but if there are
    extensive ecchymoses, phototherapy for
    hyperbilirubinemia may be indicated.

12
Cephalhaematoma
  • It is a subperiosteal haematoma most commonly
    lies over one parietal bone.
  • It may result from difficult vacuum or forceps
    extraction .

13
Cephalhaematoma
  • Management
  • - It usually resolves spontaneously.
  • - Vitamin K 1 mg IM is given.

14
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15
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16
Cephalohematoma
  • Is a subperiosteal hemorrhage, so it is always
    limited to the surface of one cranial bone.
  • There is no discoloration of the overlying scalp,
    and swelling is usually not visible until several
    hours after birth, because subperiosteal bleeding
    is a slow process.
  • An underlying skull fracture, usually linear and
    not depressed, is occasionally associated with
    cephalohematoma.

17
Cephalohematoma
  • Cranial meningocele
  • is differentiated from cephalohematoma by
  • Pulsation,
  • Increased pressure on crying, and the
  • Radiologic evidence of bony defect.
  • Most cephalohematomas are resorbed within 2 wk-3
    mo, depending on their size.
  • They may begin to calcify by the end of the 2nd
    wk.

18
Cephalohematoma
  • A sensation of central depression suggesting( but
    not indicative )of an underlying fracture or bony
    defect is
  • Cephalohematomas
  • require no treatment, although phototherapy may
    be necessary to ameliorate hyperbilirubinemia.

19
Cephalohematoma
  • Incision and drainage are contraindicated because
    of the risk of introducing infection in a benign
    condition.
  • A massive cephalohematoma may rarely result in
    blood loss severe enough to require transfusion.
  • It may also be associated with a skull fracture,
    coagulopathy, and intracranial hemorrhage.

20
Diagnosis and Differential Diagnosis
21
Fractures of the skull
  • May occur as a result of pressure from
  • Forceps or from
  • The maternal symphysis pubis.
  • Sacral promontory, or
  • Ischial spines.

22
Fracture Skull
  • Usually occurs due to difficult forceps delivery.
  • It may be
  • (1) Vault fracture
  • Usually affecting the frontal or parietal bone.
  • It may be linear or depressed fracture.
  • It needs no treatment unless there is
    intracranial haemorrhage.
  • (2) Fracture base
  • Usually associated with intracranial haemorrhage.

23
Fractures of the skull
  • Linear fractures, the most common, cause no
    symptoms and require no treatment.
  • Depressed fractures are usually indentations
    similar to a dent in a Ping-Pong ball they
    usually are a complication of forceps delivery or
    fetal compression.

24
Depressed fractures Ping-Pong ball
25
Fractures of the skull
  • Affected infants may be asymptomatic unless there
    is associated intracranial injury.
  • It is advisable to elevate severe depressions to
    prevent cortical injury from sustained pressure.

26
Fractures of the skull
  • Fracture of the Occipital bone almost causes
    fatal hemorrhage due to disruption of the
    underlying vascular sinuses.
  • It may result during breech deliveries from
    traction on the hyperextended spine of the infant
    with the head fixed in the maternal pelvis.

27
Intracranial- Intraventricular Hemorrhage
28
Intracranial Haemorrhage
  • Causes
  • Sudden compression and decompression of the head
    as in breech and precipitate labour.
  • Marked compression by forceps or in cephalopelvic
    disproportion.
  • Fracture skull.

29
Intracranial Haemorrhage
  • Predisposing factors
  • Prematurity due to physiological
    hypoprothrombinaemia, fragile blood vessels and
    liability to trauma.
  • Asphyxia due to anoxia of the vascular wall .
  • Blood diseases.

30
Intracranial Haemorrhage Sites
  • Subdural results from damage to the superficial
    veins where the vein of Galen and inferior
    sagittal sinus combine to form the straight
    sinus.
  • Subarachnoid The vein of Galen is damaged due to
    tear in the dura at the junction of the falx
    cerebri and tentorium cerebelli.
  • Intraventricular into the brain ventricles.
  • Intracerebral into the brain tissues .
  • In (1) and (2) it is usually due to birth trauma,
  • in (3) and (4) the foetus is usually a premature
    exposed to hypoxia.

31
Intracranial Haemorrhage
  • Clinical picture
  • 1- Altered consciousness.
  • 2- Flaccidity.
  • 3- Breathing is absent, irregular and periodic or
    gasping.
  • 4- Eyes no movement, pupils may be fixed and
    dilated.
  • 5- Opisthotonus, rigidity, twitches and
    convulsions.
  • 6- Vomiting .
  • 7- High pitched cry.   
  • 8- Anterior fontanelle is tense and bulging.
  • 9- Lumbar puncture reveals bloody C.S.F.

32
Intracranial Haemorrhage
  • Investigations
  • Ultrasound is of value.
  • CT scan is the most reliable.
  • MRI

33
Intracranial Haemorrhage
  • Prophylaxis
  • Vitamin K 10 mg IM to the mother in late
    pregnancy or early in labour.
  • Episiotomy especially in prematures and breech
    delivery.
  • Forceps delivery carried out by an experienced
    obstetrician respecting the instructions for its
    use.

34
Intracranial Haemorrhage Treatment
  • Minimal handling, warmth and oxygen to the baby.
  • No oral feeding for 72 hours.
  • IV fluids.
  • Vitamin K 1mg IM.
  • Lumbar puncture is diagnostic and therapeutic to
    relieve the intracranial tension if the anterior
    fontanelle is bulging.
  • Sedatives for convulsions.
  • 60 cc. of 10 sodium chloride per rectum to
    relieve brain oedema.
  • 1 cc of 50 magnesium sulphate IM to relieve
    brain oedema and convulsions.
  • Antibiotics to guard against infections
    particularly pulmonary.

35
ETIOLOGY AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • Intracranial hemorrhage may result from
  • Birth trauma or
  • Asphyxia and, rarely, from a
  • Primary hemorrhagic disturbance or
  • Congenital vascular anomaly.

36
ETIOLOGY AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • Intracranial hemorrhages often involve the
    ventricles
  • ( intraventricular hemorrhage IVH) of premature
    infants delivered spontaneously without apparent
    trauma.

37
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • The incidence of IVH increases with decreasing
    birthweight
  • 60-70 of 500- to 750-g infants and
  • 10-20 of 1,000- to 1,500-g infants.
  • IVH is rarely present at birth however,
  • 80-90 of cases occur between birth and the 3rd
    day .
  • 50 occur on the 1st day.
  • 20 to 40 of cases progress during the 1st wk of
    life.
  • Delayed hemorrhage may occur in 10-15 of
    patients after the 1st wk of life.

38
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • The most common symptoms are
  • Diminished or absent Moro reflex.
  • Poor muscle tone.
  • Lethargy.
  • Apnea.
  • Somnolence.

39
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
  • Periods of apnea,
  • Pallor, or cyanosis
  • Failure to suck well
  • Abnormal eye signs
  • A high-pitched cry
  • Muscular twitches, convulsions, decreased muscle
    tone, or paralyses
  • Metabolic acidosis shock, and a
  • Decreased hematocrit or its failure to increase
    after transfusion may be the first indications.
  • The fontanel may be tense and bulging.

40
DIAGNOSIS
  • Intracranial hemorrhage is diagnosed on the basis
    of the
  • History,
  • Clinical manifestations,
  • Transfontanel cranial ultrasonography or
  • Computed tomography (CT), and

41
DIAGNOSIS
  • Lumbar puncture
  • is indicated in the presence of signs of
  • Increased intracranial pressure or
  • Deteriorating clinical condition
  • to identify gross subarachnoid hemorrhage or to
    rule out the possibility of bacterial meningitis

42
PROGNOSIS
  • Neonates with
  • ( massive hemorrhage associated with tears of the
    tentorium or falx cerebri)
  • rapidly deteriorate and may die after birth.

43
PREVENTION
  • The incidence of traumatic intracranial
    hemorrhage may be reduced by
  • judicious management of cephalopelvic
    disproportion and operative delivery.

44
PREVENTION
  • Fetal or neonatal hemorrhage due to
  • Maternal idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura
    (ITP) or
  • Alloimmune thrombocytopenia
  • may be prevented by maternal treatment with
  • Steroids,
  • Intravenous immunoglobulin, or
  • Fetal platelet transfusion.

45
PREVENTION
  • The incidence of IVH may be reduced by antenatal
    steroids and by postnatal administration of
    low-dose indomethacin.
  • Vitamin K should be given before delivery to all
    women receiving phenobarbital or phenytoin during
    the pregnancy.

46
TREATMENT
  • Seizures are treated with anticonvulsant drugs.
  • Anemia-shock, requires transfusion with packed
    red blood cells or fresh frozen plasma.
  • Acidosis is treated with slow administration of
    sodium bicarbonate.

47
TREATMENT
  • Symptomatic subdural hemorrhage in large term
    infants should be treated by removing the
    subdural fluid collection by means of a spinal
    needle placed through the lateral margin of the
    anterior fontanel.

48
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • Strong traction exerted
  • When the spine is hyperextended or
  • When the direction of pull is lateral, or
  • Forceful longitudinal traction on the trunk while
    the head is still firmly engaged in the pelvis
  • (may produce fracture and separation of the
    vertebrae).

49
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • Such injuries, rarely diagnosed clinically, are
    most likely to occur with shoulder dystocia.
  • The injury occurs most commonly at the level of
    the 4th cervical vertebra with cephalic
    presentations and
  • The lower cervical-upper thoracic vertebrae with
    breech presentations.

50
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51
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • Transection of the cord may occur with or without
    vertebral fractures.
  • Hemorrhage and edema may produce neurologic signs
    that are not distinguished from those of
    transection
  • (except that they may not be permanent).

52
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • Areflexia,
  • Loss of sensation, and
  • Complete paralysis of voluntary motion
  • Occur below the level of injury

53
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • If the injury is severe, the infant, (who may be
    in poor condition owing to respiratory
    depression, shock, or hypothermia),
  • May deteriorate rapidly to death within several
    hours before neurologic signs are obvious.

54
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • The course may be protracted, with symptoms and
    signs appearing at birth or later in the 1st wk
    may not be recognized for several days.
  • Constipation may also be present.

55
Spine and Spinal Cord
  • The diagnosis is confirmed by
  • Ultrasonography or MRI.
  • Treatment of the survivors is
  • supportive, including home ventilation patients
    often remain permanently injured.

56
Peripheral Nerve Injuries
57
Brachial Plexus Palsy
  • It is due to over traction on
  • the neck as in
  • Shoulder dystocia.     
  • After-coming head in breech delivery.

58
Brachial Plexus Palsy
  • Erb's palsy
  • It is the common, due to injury to C5 and C6
    roots.
  • The upper limb drops beside the trunk, internally
    rotated with flexed wrist
  • (policemans or waiters tip hand).

59
Brachial Plexus Palsy
  • (2) Klumpkes palsy
  • It is less common,
  • Due to injury to C7 and C8 and 1st thoracic
    roots.
  • - It leads to paralysis of the muscles of the
    hand and weakness of the wrist and fingers'
    flexors.

60
Brachial Plexus Palsy
  • Treatment
  • Support to prevent stretching of the paralyzed
    muscles.
  • Physiotherapy massage, exercise and faradic
    stimulation.

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62
BRACHIAL PALSY
  • Injury to the brachial plexus may cause paralysis
    of the upper arm with or without paralysis of the
    forearm or hand or, more commonly, paralysis of
    the entire arm.
  • Approximately 45 are associated with shoulder
    dystocia.

63
BRACHIAL PALSY
  • These injuries occur in
  • Macrosomic infants and when lateral traction is
    exerted on the head and neck during delivery of
    the shoulder in a vertex presentation,
  • When the arms are extended over the head in a
    breech presentation, or
  • When excessive traction is placed on the
    shoulders.

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65
In Erb-Duchenne paralysis
  • The injury is limited to the 5th and 6th cervical
    nerves.
  • The characteristic position consists of
  • ( Adduction and internal rotation of the arm with
    pronation of the forearm).
  • Moro reflex is absent on the affected side

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In Erb-Duchenne paralysis
  • There may be some sensory impairment on the outer
    aspect of the arm.
  • The power in the forearm and the hand grasp are
    preserved unless the lower part of the plexus is
    also injured
  • (the presence of the hand grasp is a favorable
    prognostic sign).

68
Klumpke's paralysis
  • Is a rarer form of brachial palsy
  • Injury to the 7th and 8th cervical nerves and the
    1st thoracic nerve produces a paralyzed hand,
  • (Horner syndrome)
  • If the sympathetic fibers of the 1st thoracic
    root are also injured paralyzed hand
    and ipsilateral ptosis and miosis.

69
Klumpke's paralysis
  • The mild cases may not be detected immediately
    after birth.
  • Differentiation must be made from
  • Cerebral injury
  • Fracture, dislocation, or epiphyseal separation
    of the humerus
  • Fracture of the clavicle.
  • MRI demonstrates nerve root rupture or avulsion

70
common
uncommon
edema and hemorrhage
Laceration
71
The prognosis
  • Depends on whether the nerve was merely injured
    or was lacerated.
  • If the paralysis was due to edema and hemorrhage
    about the nerve fibers, function should return
    within a few months
  • If due to laceration, permanent damage may
    result.

72
The prognosis
  • Involvement of the deltoid is usually the most
    serious problem and may result in a shoulder drop
    secondary to muscle atrophy.
  • In general, paralysis of the upper arm has a
    better prognosis than paralysis of the lower arm.

73
Treatment
  • Partial immobilization and appropriate
    positioning to prevent development of
    contractures.
  • In upper arm paralysis the arm should be
    abducted, with external rotation at the shoulder
    and with full supination of the forearm and
    slight extension at the wrist with the palm
    turned toward the face.

74
Treatment
  • In lower arm or hand paralysis the wrist should
    be splinted in a neutral position and padding
    placed in the fist.
  • Gentle massage and range of motion exercises may
    be started by 7-10 days of age.

75
Treatment
  • If the paralysis persists without improvement for
    3-6 months neuroplasty, neurolysis, end-to-end
    anastomosis, or nerve grafting
  • offers hope for partial recovery.

76
PHRENIC NERVE PARALYSIS
  • Phrenic nerve injury (3rd, 4th, 5th cervical
    nerves) with diaphragmatic paralysis must be
    considered when cyanosis and irregular and
    labored respirations develop.
  • Such injuries, usually unilateral, are associated
    with ipsilateral upper brachial palsy.

77
PHRENIC NERVE PARALYSIS
  • The diagnosis
  • is established by ultrasonography or fluoroscopic
    examination, which reveals elevation of the
    diaphragm on the paralyzed side
  • There is no specific treatment
  • infants should be placed on the involved side
    and given oxygen if necessary.

78
PHRENIC NERVE PARALYSIS
  • Recovery usually occurs spontaneously by 1-3
    months rarely, surgical plication of the
    diaphragm may be indicated.

79
Facial Palsy (Bells palsy)
  • It is usually due to pressure by the forceps
    blade on the facial nerve at
  • Its exit from the stylomastoid foramen or
  • In its course over the mandibular ramus.
  • - It appears within 1-2 days after delivery due
    to resultant oedema and haemorrhage around the
    nerve.

80
Facial Palsy (Bells palsy)
  • Manifestations
  • There is paresis of the facial muscles on the
    affected side with
  • Partially opened eye and
  • Flattening of the nasolabial fold.
  • The mouth angle is deviated towards the healthy
    side.
  • Spontaneous recovery usually occurs
  • within 14 days.

81
FACIAL NERVE PALSY
  • When the infant cries, there is movement only on
    the non paralyzed side of the face, and the mouth
    is drawn to that side.
  • On the affected side the forehead is smooth, the
    eye cannot be closed, the nasolabial fold is
    absent, and the corner of the mouth drops.

82
FACIAL NERVE PALSY
  • The prognosis depends on whether the nerve was
    injured by pressure or whether the nerve fibers
    were torn.
  • Care of the exposed eye is essential.

83
FACIAL NERVE PALSY
  • Improvement occurs within few weeks.
  • Neuroplasty may be indicated when the paralysis
    is persistent.

84
Other peripheral nerves
  • are seldom injured in utero or at birth except
    when they are involved in fractures or
    hemorrhages.

85
V) VISCERAL INJURIES
  • (Liver, spleen and kidney)
  • may be injured in breech delivery which should
    be avoided by holding the fetus from its hips.

86
Viscera (The liver )
  • The liver is the only internal organ other than
    the brain that is injured with any frequency
    during birth.
  • The damage usually results from pressure on the
    liver during delivery of the head in breech
    presentations.
  • Incorrect cardiac massage is a less frequent
    cause.

87
Viscera (The liver )
  • Hepatic rupture may result in the formation of a
    subcapsular hematoma.
  • The hematoma may be large enough to cause anemia.
  • Shock and death may occur if the hematoma breaks
    through the capsule into the peritoneal cavity.

88
Viscera (The liver )
  • A mass may be palpable in the right upper
    quadrant the abdomen may appear blue.
  • Early suspicion by means of ultrasonographic
    diagnosis and prompt supportive therapy can
    decrease the mortality of this disorder.
  • Surgical repair of a laceration may be required.

89
Rupture of the spleen
  • May occur alone or in association with rupture of
    the liver.
  • The causes, complications, treatment, and
    prevention are similar.

90
Adrenal hemorrhage
  • Occurs with some frequency, especially after
    breech delivery in LGA infants or infants of
    diabetic mothers.
  • 90 are unilateral 75 are right sided.
  • The symptoms are profound shock and cyanosis
  • If suspected, abdominal ultrasonography may be
    helpful, and treatment for acute adrenal failure
    may be indicated

91
Fractures
92
BONE INJURIES
  • These usually occur during difficult breech
    delivery.
  • (A) Vertebral Column Injuries
  • These are fatal if associated with spinal cord
    transection above C4 ,due to diaphragmatic
    paralysis.
  • (B) Femur, Humerus and Clavicle
  • Managed by splint to the long bone and a sling
    for clavicular fracture.

93
CLAVICLE
  • This bone is fractured during labor and delivery
  • more frequently than any other bone
  • It is particularly vulnerable when there is
  • Difficulty in delivery of the shoulder in vertex
    presentations and of
  • The extended arms in breech deliveries.

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95
CLAVICLE
  • The infant characteristically does not move the
    arm freely on the affected side
  • Crepitus and bony irregularity may be palpated,
    and
  • Discoloration is occasionally visible over the
    fracture site.

96
CLAVICLE
  • Treatment, consists of immobilization of the arm
    and shoulder on the affected side.
  • A remarkable degree of callus develops at the
    site within a week and may be the first evidence
    of the fracture.
  • The prognosis is excellent.

97
EXTREMITIES
  • In fractures of the long bones, spontaneous
    movement of the extremity is usually absent.
  • The Moro reflex is also absent from the involved
    extremity.
  • There may be associated nerve involvement.

98
EXTREMITIES (Humerus)
  • Satisfactory results of treatment for a fractured
    humerus are obtained with
  • 2-4 wk of immobilization
  • (during which the arm is
  • strapped to the chest).
  • A triangular splint and a bandage are applied, or
    a cast is applied.

99
EXTREMITIES
  • In fracture femur good results are obtained
    with traction-suspension of both lower
    extremities, even if the fracture is unilateral
  • The legs, immobilized in a cast, are attached to
    an overhead frame.
  • Splints are effective for treatment of fractures
    of the forearm or leg.

100
EXTREMITIES
  • Healing is usually accompanied by excess callus
    formation.
  • The prognosis is excellent for fractures of the
    extremities.
  • Fractures in preterm infants may be related to
    osteopenia

101
Dislocations and epiphyseal separations
  • Rarely result from birth trauma.
  • The upper femoral epiphysis may be separated by
    forcible manipulation of the infant's leg, as,
    for example, in breech extraction or after
    version.

102
Dislocations and epiphyseal separations
  • The affected leg shows swelling, slight
    shortening, limitation of active motion, painful
    passive motion, and external rotation.
  • The diagnosis is established radiologically
  • The prognosis is good for the milder injuries.

103
MUSCLE INJURIES
  • Strenomastoid injury
  • Due to
  • Exaggerated lateral flexion of the neck leading
    to torticollis and swelling in the muscle.
  • It is usually improved within 2 weeks but
    permanent torticollis may continue.

104
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